Mar 24, 2005
Edgardo Vega Yunqué |
May 19, 2005
Thomas Glave |
Jun 16, 2005
Ernesto Quiñonez |
Sep 29, 2005
Billy Collins |
Oct 27, 2005
Victor LaValle |
Dec 15, 2005
Edward P. Jones |
Jan 19, 2006
Franz Wright |
Feb 23, 2006
Ishmael Reed |
Mar 8, 2006
Cornel West |
Mar 30, 2006
C.K. Williams |
Apr 20, 2006
Chris Abani |
May 18, 2006
Robert Pinksy |
Jun 15, 2006
Honorée Jeffers |
Oct 26 , 2006
Caryl Phillips |
Nov 9, 2006
Cornelius Eady |
Jan 18 , 2007
Major Jackson |
Feb 15 , 2007
Angie Cruz |
Mar 15 , 2007
Colson Whitehead |
Apr 12, 2007
Piri Thomas |
May 10, 2007
Chang-Rae Lee |
Jun 06 , 2007
Junot Diaz |
Sep 27 , 2007
Willie Perdomo |
Nov 08 , 2007
Tim Seibles |
Jan 31, 2008
Percival Everett |
Mar 11 , 2008
Patricia Smith |
May 22 , 2008
Terrance Hayes |
Nov 6, 2008
Yusef Komunyakaa |
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Patricia Smith |
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Harriman Clubhouse
287 East 10th Street
New York, NY 10009
Mar 11, 7p
Internationally renowned as a performance poet, Patricia Smith is four-time national individual champion of the notorious and wildly popular poetry slam, an energized competition where poets are judged on the content and performance of their work. She is also regarded as one of the few performance poets whose work translates effortlessly to the page. Indeed, the Small Press Review declares, “Smith writes the way Tina Turner sings.” Smith’s most recent collection, Teahouse of the Almighty, was chosen by Ed Sanders for the 2005 National Poetry Series, and was published by Coffee House Press in 2006. Her three previous books of poetry are, Close to Death (Zoland Books), Big Towns, Big Talk (Zoland Books), and Life According to Motown (Tia Chucha). In reviewing Close to Death for Library Journal, Louis McKee said, “…souls rage from the hellfire of the streets, and Smith effectively captures the language and urgency, the rhythms and fury.”
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